Histological and electrophysiological evidence on the safe operation of a sharp-tip
multimodal optrode during infrared neuromodulation of the rat cortex
National Brain Research Program(2017_1.2.1-NKP-2017-00002)
Thematic Excellence Program(TKP2020-NKA-11)
Thematic Excellence Program(TKP2021-EGA-42)
NKFIH FK(34403)
Subjects:
Other engineering and technologies
Infrared neuromodulation is an emerging technology in neuroscience that exploits the
inherent thermal sensitivity of neurons to excite or inhibit cellular activity. Since
there is limited information on the physiological response of intracortical cell population
in vivo including evidence on cell damage, we aimed to create and to validate the
safe operation of a microscale sharp-tip implantable optrode that can be used to suppress
the activity of neuronal population with low optical power continuous wave irradiation.
Effective thermal cross-section and electric properties of the multimodal microdevice
was characterized in bench-top tests. The evoked multi-unit activity was monitored
in the rat somatosensory cortex, and using NeuN immunocytochemistry method, quantitative
analysis of neuronal density changes due to the stimulation trials was evaluated.
The sharp tip implant was effectively used to suppress the firing rate of neuronal
populations. Histological staining showed that neither the probe insertion nor the
heating protocols alone lead to significant changes in cell density in the close vicinity
of the implant with respect to the intact control region. Our study shows that intracortical
stimulation with continuous-wave infrared light at 1550 nm using a sharp tip implantable
optical microdevice is a safe approach to modulate the firing rate of neurons.